What's
New @ Ramsar
31
July 2003![]()
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Headline
story. Valediction from the Secretary General.
On his last day as Secretary General of the Convention on Wetlands, Delmar
Blasco has a brief farewell message for the Ramsar family.
You can find it here. [31/07/03]
Announcement.
Wetlands International seeking new CEO. Wetlands
International, an NGO with 19 offices worldwide, over 140 staff, and an annual
turnover of about €10 million, is seeking a new CEO, to succeed Simon Nash.
The postholder will be based in Wageningen, The Netherlands, and is the chief
managing officer, responsible to the Board of Members. The CEO will be required
to: manage the global organisation, including responsibility for personnel,
finances and budgets, fund raising, manage the Netherlands office and support
promotional and communication activities; support the science-based program;
support the Board of Directors; and represent the organisation with members,
partners, and intergovernmental bodies. The announcement and terms of reference
have been reprinted here [link
later removed] and can be seen on the Wetlands
International Web site as well. [31/07/03]
Headline
story. Visit to Ramsar sites in Malaysia.
During a recent visit to the region, Ramsar's Regional Coordinator for Asia,
Dr Guangchun Lei, took the opportunity to visit recently designated Ramsar
sites in Johor State in Malaysia, including the southernmost point of mainland
Asia. There he viewed the promising management steps being taken and made several
recommendations, and he urged his hosts to place the Tanjung
Piai site on the Montreux Record so that expert advice could be sought
to how to deal with increasing erosion in just the past few months caused by
wave action from new international sea port nearby. Here
is a brief report, with photos. [31/07/03]
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| Ramsar Trivia: Where was the 1971 Ramsar conference meant to be held? Answer. |
Who's where?
Who was where? Cumulated record of travels throughout the year.
New
on the Site: Acta
de la Primera Reunión de Junta Directive del Centro Regional Ramsar en
Panamá, para la Capacitación e Investigación sobre Humedales
en el Hemisferio Occidental. [17/07/03]
Algeria
designates 13 varied new Ramsar sites.
The Ministry
of Agriculture and Rural Development, the Ramsar Administrative Authority in
the Republic of Algeria, has newly designated 13 additional Wetlands of International
Importance. In studies assisted financially by the Living
Waters Programme of the Worldwide Fund
for
Nature (WWF International), the Ministry has presented well-researched Ramsar
Information Sheets on an array of wetland types in various parts of the country.
There are several "chotts" or seasonal salt lake/flats (we learn that
the word "chott" means "border" in Arabic, referring to
the vegetated ring surrounding the salt flat itself, which is properly called
a "sebkha"), mostly in the steppe area in the north of the country
between the northern and southern ranges of the Atlas mountains. We also have
a "gueltate", in Tamanrasset, one of the rocky terraced pool systems
found in the high mountains in the south, not unlike the fascinating Ramsar
site at Issakarassene. There is a karstic subterranean hydrological system,
Ghar Boumâaze, said to be the largest cavern network in Africa, with remarkable
flora and fauna both inside and out. And a classic set of oases, complete with
the fouggaras, those communal water-channeling system a thousand years old that
we learnt about from Algeria's
previous designations in February 2001. As well as a few lively pools
and marshes lying behind dune systems along the Mediterranean coast. And as
well as geothermal springs in the Ksour mountains into the bargain. Special
thanks have to go to the Algerian authority for these superb new designations,
particularly to Dr Ammar Boumezbeur who led the research efforts, as
well as to WWF International for the long involvement of the Living Waters Programme
in the safeguarding of these important North African sites. Brief
descriptions of the new sites can be found here.
Algeria now has 26 Ramsar sites, covering a surface area of 2,791,992 hectares, and boosts the Convention's totals to 1305 sites covering 110,028,570 ha. [29/07/03] [français et/y español]
Vacancy
announcement. IAIA -- Technical Programme Manager
(TPM) position. Call
for proposals for IAIA programme on capacity building for biodiversity in impact
assessment. Our colleagues at the International Association for
Impact Assessment (IAIA) are establishing a new programme on capacity building
for biodiversity in impact assessment and would like to receive proposals for
detailed development and delivery of the programme from candidates who would
be interested in the role of Technical Programme Manager (TPM) for this exciting
new initiative. The call for proposals is reprinted here [link
later removed], and the other relevant documents are procurable
on the IAIA's Web site, http://www.iaia.org.
[30/07/03]
Comunidades
de sitio Ramsar en Argentina en programa de educación ambiental.
El proyecto "Capacitación y Concienciación de la Comunidad
Regional, Protectores Ambientales y Guardafaunas en el Sitio Ramsar Jaaukanigás",
financiado por el fondo Humedales para el Futuro, va viento en popa. Recientemente
se produjo un folleto a todo color resaltando la riqueza biológica, cultural
e histórica de Jaaukanigás (que significa gente del agua), ubicado
en la planicie de inundación del río Paraná en la provincial
de Santa Fe en Argentina. También se difunden constantemente programas
radiales acerca de los valores y funciones del humedal, y se están programando
talleres de capacitación para el mes de agosto. El trabajo está
siendo realizado por el Instituto Nacional de Limnología (INALI-CONICET)
en conjunto con el Instituto de Cultura Popular INCUPO, la Secretaría
de Estado de Medio Ambiente y Desarrollo Sustentable -SEMADS, y la Facultad
de Ciencias Agrarias de la Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Jaaukanigás
es un complejo extenso de ríos, cursos principales, riachos, madrejones,
lagunas, esteros, bañados rodeados por bosques y selvas de galería,
refugio de numerosas especies amenazadas y grandes congregaciones de patos.
Hay una vida acuática muy rica, con cerca de 300 especies de peces que
son claves para la economía regional, ya que el 50 % de la población
del área vive de la pesca. [29/07/03]
The project "Education and Awareness Program of communities and rangers of the Jaaukanigás Ramsar site", financed by the Wetlands for the Future Fund, is currently and successfully under way. Jaaukanigás (meaning "people of the water"), is located in the floodplain of the Paraná River. There, several institutions are educating local communities about the values and functions of wetlands by means of radio programs, workshops and published materials, such as a wonderful brochure recently created for the site. Jaaukanigás is an extensive complex of rivers, lagoons, pools, permanent freshwater marshes and seasonally inundated grassland, interspersed with riparian woodland and gallery forest, providing refuge for various threatened species and large flocks of waterfowl. There is a very rich aquatic life, with about 300 fish species, key for the regional economy, as 50% of the population in the area live by fishing.
Ramsar
visit to Latvia. Recently, Ilona Jepsena, the Director of
the Nature Protection Department in the Ministry of Environment, responsible
for Ramsar implementation in Latvia, invited Tobias Salathé, Ramsar's
Regional Coordinator for Europe, to visit Latvian Ramsar Sites and to gain insight
into their management situation.This provided a useful occasion to meet with
key people at the Ministry of Environment in Riga, including Minister Raimonds
Vejonis. The participants in the meeting in Riga and during the site visits
improved, reciprocally, the understanding of the Ramsar Convention and wetland
conservation issues in Latvia. It provided useful opportunities to discuss in
depth different aspects related to the implementation of the Ramsar Convention
and local development imperatives.
Here Tobias Salathé provides a brief report on the trip and some excellent
photographs of the sites. [28/07/03]
From
the Ramsar Forum. News from Saemangeum.
Readers who have been following the story of the Republic of Korea's Saemangeum
mudflats on the Yellow Sea, one of Asia's most important staging areas for migratory
birds which is threatened with 'reclamation' for agricultural or industrial
development, will be delighted to learn that the BBC's recent Earth
Report television documentary on the controversy, "Dyke
Hard", is available for download in .ram format from the BBC's
Web site, here.
This 23-minute show, directed by Ken Pugh (who made the recent Ramsar
video) of the Television Trust for the Environment (TVE), demonstrates the importance
of the vast site, as one of only two remaining natural estuaries in the country,
not only for enormous numbers of birds migrating between the Arctic and the
Oceania region, but also for
the productivity of local fisheries and the livelihoods of some 25,000 traditional
fishermen in the area and their culture. The show, laying out both sides of
the issue, accurately describes the Ramsar principles in such matters and the
Ramsar Bureau's concerns about this case, which have been expressed to the Government,
and it features interviews with Nial Moores
(of the NGO WBK English), a well-known friend of Ramsar who has been working
tirelessly for the welfare of Korean wetlands for some years. In fact, earlier
today Nial Moores posted to the Ramsar Forum a brief update on the situation
at Saemangeum following a 15 July court decision suspending construction of
the 33-kilometre embankment -- you'll
find Nial's message to the Forum right here. [26/07/03]
From
the CEPA List. Pennies for the Planet. Earlier
today on the Convention's "CEPA List", the e-mail discussion group
dedicated to communication, education, and public awareness about wetlands,
Sandra Hails highlights a successful campaign
by WWF-US that introduces schoolchildren to three threatened habitats, two of
them in other parts of the world - the Miombo Woodlands
of
Southern Africa and the Atlantic Forest of South America - and the third, the
Everglades in South Florida, on home ground. The "Pennies
for the Planet" campaign, now in its fourth year of operation,
encourages students (and their teachers of course) to get involved in taking
action to conserve threatened habitats, each year focusing on different habitats.
Here is her description of
the Pennies for the Planet initiative. [25/07/03]
Iran
helps Siberian Cranes with new Ramsar site. The
Ramsar Bureau is very pleased to announce that the Islamic Republic of Iran
has designated its 22nd Wetland of International Importance, a BirdLife "Important
Bird Area" and Wildlife Refuge near the southern Caspian seacoast. "Fereydoon
Kenar, Ezbaran & Sorkh Ruds Ab-Bandans" (5,427 ha, 36°40'N,
52°33'E) in Mazandaran province is an artificially maintained wetland in
the South Caspian lowlands. The area is of outstanding importance as wintering
grounds for the entire western population of the Siberian Crane (Grus leucogeranus),
listed as 'critically endangered' in the IUCN Red Book. Having reappeared at
the site in 1978 after 60 years' absence, the number of Siberian Cranes now
fluctuates between 7-14. The new designation is part of a GEF project, implemented
through UNEP and coordinated by the International Crane Foundation and CMS,
aims to conserve the critical sites used by Siberian Cranes for breeding, staging
during migration, and the main wintering grounds. Here
is an interesting description of the new site, as summarized from the RIS by
Ramsar's Liazzat Rabbiosi. [24/07/03] [français
et/y español]
The
Ramsar Bureau's farewell season continues. As the Convention's Secretary
General since 1995, Mr Delmar Blasco, folds
up his tents and prepares to yield his crown and sceptre to Dr Peter
Bridgewater, his successor, at the end of the month, the
Government
of Switzerland fêted his achievements with the Convention
on Wetlands with a vast array of hors d'oeuvres at the IUCN headquarters on
14 July -- view that here
-- and then Achim Steiner, Director General
of IUCN-The World Conservation Union, paid his own tribute at an IUCN staff
meeting on 22 July -- view that,
too, here. Presumably few regular viewers will have missed the tributes,
wine, cheese, and salami laid on in the same good cause by WWF's Living Waters
Programme on 10 July, but just in case -- view
that here as well. [23/07/03]
Coral
reefs and the environmental conventions. Coral reefs, so important
for biodiversity and human well-being, are being lost and degraded at increasingly
alarming rates. Actions to reverse this trend are being taken, however, and
the World Summit on Sustainable Development, in its Plan of Implementation,
sets out targets for sustainable management that help to focus global efforts.
In an effort to provide the information needed to synergize the efforts under
way and identify gaps, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and WWF's
Coral Reefs Advocacy Initiative have published an 18-page brochure entitled
"Conventions and Coral Reefs"
- following a foreword by UNEP's Executive Director Klaus
Töpfer (reprinted
here) and an analysis of the WSSD Plan of Implementation in terms of
coral reefs, there are single-page entries on the coral-related work of a number
of prominent instruments, including the CBD, Ramsar, CITES, World Heritage,
UNFCCC, MAB, CMS, ICRI and ICRAN, among others. Inquiries about the hardcopy
brochure can be directed to Jerker Tamelander at UNEP in Nairobi (jerker.tamelander@unep.org).
[22/07/03]
Now
available. Summary of SWS Ramsar Grants. The
Society of Wetland Scientists has been operating a Ramsar Support Grants Programme
since 1999. The programme manager, Eric Gilman, co-chair of the SWS International
Committee, has provided a summary of the 15 grants that have been awarded from
1999 to 2003. Here it is.
[22/07/03]
Germany
designates parts of the Elbe floodplain. The Ramsar Bureau is very
pleased to announce that the Federal Republic of Germany has designated its
32nd Ramsar site, and its first since 1991. Germany's 32 sites now cover 839,327
hectares, and the Convention's total of 1291 Wetlands of International Importance
covers a surface area of 109,097,491 ha. As summarized by Ramsar's Estelle
Gironnet from the Ramsar Information Sheet, "Aland-Elbe-Niederung
und Elbaue Jerichow" (listed as of 21/02/03, 8,605 hectares,
52°45'N 011°49'E) comprises two large parts of the floodplain of the
Elbe river, including two EU Special Protection Areas and part of the Biosphere
Reserve "Flusslandschaft Elbe". Both areas are composed of near-natural
floodplain meadows, despite anthropogenic changes, with dynamic floodplain development
and regular flooding occurring at a reduced level. The area is of outstanding
importance for breeding, resting and wintering waterbirds, waders and grassland
species. The site harbours large gatherings of Cygnus bewickii (2.7%
of NW European flyway population), Cygnus Cygnus (2%), Anser fabalis
(30%), Anser albifrons (2.5%), and Grus grus (6.6%) and offers
opportunities for research and education activities. Grassland habitat is maintained
by mowing and grazing. Public water bodies are used mostly for fishing. Problems
with waterbird hunting arise regularly. [21/07/03] [français
et/y español]
Wine-tasting
in Switzerland. On 10 July 2003, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF)
International, and particularly its Living Waters Programme, paused in its headlong
progress towards sustainable development and hosted an evening's wine-tasting
cheese-pigout in Begnins, Switzerland, and paid tribute to
Delmar Blasco and Anada Tiéga,
both of whom will soon be leaving the Ramsar Bureau, and Biksham
Gujja, for his ten years' service with WWF. In particular, Claude
Martin (left) drew attention to Mr Blasco's groundbreaking address
to the Parties at Ramsar COP6 in Brisbane in 1996 and described how instrumental
that speech had been in helping to forge the very strong relations between WWF
and Ramsar that continue today. If
you want to see photos of Ramsar and WWF people eating cheese and drinking wine,
click here. [21/07/03]
Liberia
joins the Ramsar Convention. The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Liberia
first deposited his country's instrument of accession with the Director General
of UNESCO in January 2002, but without designating at least one Wetland of International
Importance in the territory of the acceding country (as required by the Convention).
The designation of the first Ramsar site, Lake Piso, was completed by the National
Environmental Commission of Liberia in June 2003; UNESCO has now informed the
Ramsar Bureau that the requirements for accession have been met as of 2 July,
and the Convention will therefore come into force for Liberia on 2 November
2003. Lake Piso (76,091 hectares, 06°45'N
011°13'W) is an open coastal lagoon near Robertsport to the west of Monrovia,
the largest such inlet on the Liberian coast, surrounded by forested hillsides
(including one of the rarest tropical rainforests in the region) and fed by
a number of creeks and rivers; these latter drain a series of swamps above the
lagoon, the lower ones of which are tidal and support mangroves. Other mangrove
swamps occur behind the dune ridge on the west side of the lake mouth and at
other creek mouths. A series of small lakes with swampy margins occurs on the
sandy forested spit that separates the lake from the sea. Some 38 communities,
totaling about 7000 people, depend upon Piso for transportation, commercial
and non-commercial fishing, and sand for construction, and farm-to-market infrastructure
was well-developed prior to the civil crisis of the past decade. The site is
important both as a nursery and spawning ground for fish and sea turtles and
as feeding and roosting places for large numbers of shore and sea birds. Mammals
such as antelopes, duikers, monkeys, bushbucks, and a few crocodiles are also
found in the area. The National Environmental Commission has also submitted
in June 2003 the designation of a second Ramsar site, the Marshall Wetlands,
which is presently undergoing review by the Ramsar Bureau's regional team before
proceeding to its inclusion in the Ramsar List. [19/07/03] [français
et/y español]
Ceremonies
at Albania's Butrint. Ceremonies were held in Saranda on 14 July
2003 to present the Ramsar site diploma to Albanian authorities for the newly
designated Lake Butrint Ramsar site and to consider the future development of
the area around the Ramsar and World Heritage site. Participants from the Ministry
of Environment, local authorities and NGOs, the national science museum, and
the London-based Butrint Foundation covered a number of ecological, historical,
and archaeological topics and then visited the site for a first-hand view. Tobias
Salathé was there and provides this brief illustrated report on the event.
[17/07/03]
From
the Ramsar Forum. Web site on East
Asian-Australasian site networks.
Dr Taej Mundkur of Wetlands International
writes to the Ramsar Forum: "A new interactive set of maps and information
links on the three international Site Networks for migratory waterbirds (shorebirds,
cranes and Anatidae [ducks, geese and swans]) in the East Asian-Australasian
region has been launched. . . . The Networks have been established under the
Asia-Pacific Migratory Waterbird Conservation Strategy,
an international cooperative initiative launched in 1996." Click
here for Taej's description of the new "gateway" and the Web address
where the new site can be found. [16/07/03]
Training
available in Latin America.
El Instituto Latinoamericano de Ciencias Marinas y
del Ambiente (ILCMA) ofrecerá el próximo mes de Septiembre
los siguientes cursos: "Herramientas Estadísticas para el Análisis
de Ecosistemas Costeros". San Andrés, Colombia Septiembre 7-12,
2003 y "Turismo Sostenible en el Manejo Integrado de la Zona Costera".
San Andrés, Colombia Septiembre 14-19, 2003. Para información
completa del contenido de los mismos visite la pagina Web: www.ilcmamiami.org
o comuníquese a: ilcma@ilcmamiami.org,
ilcma@hotmail.com.
ILCMA (Latin-American Environmental and Marine Sciences Institute) is offering two courses next September: "Statistical tools for the Analysis of Coastal Ecosystems", San Andres, Colombia, 7-12 September 2003 and "Sustainable Tourism in the Integrated Management of Coastal Zones", San Andres, Colombia, 14-19 September 2003. For further information, visit: www.ilcmamiami.org or write to: ilcma@ilcmamiami.org ilcma@hotmail.com. [15/07/03]
Ecuador
names 11th Ramsar site. The Bureau is delighted to announce that
the Ministerio del Ambiente of Ecuador has designated that country's 11th Ramsar
site, effective 12 June. As summarized by Iván Darío Valencia
Rodríguez and Julio Montes de Oca from the Ramsar Information Sheets,
the Reserva Ecológica Cayapas-Mataje
(44,847 hectares, 01º16'N, 079º00'W), located in Esmeralda Province
on the Pacific coast near the border with Colombia, between the rivers Cayapas
and Mataje, is a complex of estuaries and mangrove forests within the Choco-Darien-Western
Ecuador hotspot, a region recognized worldwide for its high level of biodiversity,
numerous endemic species, and priority for conservation. Sedge marshes, tidal
brackish marshes, peatlands or guandales, as well as humid tropical forest add
to its richness. The high productivity of phytoplankton and mangrove forests
sustains a diverse wildlife, with reportedly 6 species of mangrove, 68 of fish,
22 of reptiles, 145 of birds and 53 of mammals, including several threatened
taxa at national or global scale, such as the black mangrove Avicennia germinans,
the Neotropical Otter Lutra longicaudis, the Jaguar Panthera onca,
the Blue-fronted Parrotlet Touit dilectissima and the American Crocodile
Crocodylus acutus. The Afro-Ecuadorian population at the site
is
involved in fishing, gathering of mussels and crustaceans, subsistence agriculture
and livestock raising, and recently, ecotourism. Archaeological remains of the
Tolita culture (ca. 500 BC-AD 400) are abundant. The area has been affected
by the construction of numerous shrimp pools and the establishment of crop plantations.
Following designation as a Nature Reserve in 1996, a management plan is in preparation
with local involvement. WWF International's Living Waters Programme and the
Fundación Natura assisted Ecuador in making this designation. Ecuador
now has 11 sites covering 158,481 ha, and the Convention, 1289 sites with an
area of 109,012,795 ha. [09/07/03] [français
et/y español]
Una
Reciente Publicación para Argentina y América del Sur
(A recent publication for Argentina and South America). La Dra. Maura Beatríz
Kufner, del Centro de Ecología y Recursos Naturales Renovables, Universidad
de Córdoba, Argentina, nos informa de la reciente publicación
"Los Humedales del Oeste Argentino".
Esta
excelente publicación, desarrollada en seguimiento al 2º Taller
Regional Programa Argentino UICN de Humedales recopila contribuciones detallando
la historia, instituciones y el inventariado de humedales del oeste Argentino,
así como los estudios de caso: "Reserva Laguna Brava - La Rioja,
Argentina"; "Laguna Llancanelo, una Joya del Árido"; y
"Parque Provincial Tromen". Su publicación
fue financiada por la Secretaría de la Convención de Ramsar.
Para mayor información sobre la misma, favor consultar a la Dra. Kufner:
Dra. Maura Beatriz Kufner, CERNAR, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, bkufner@efn.uncor.edu.
[09/07/03]
Report
available. River basin congress held in Peru.
The Third Latin American River Basin Congress (III
Congreso Latinoamericano de Manejo de Cuencas Hidrográficas)
took place in Arequipa, Peru, 8-12 June 2003 and was attended by more than 1000
professionals from all over Latin America, Spain, Canada and the USA. Issues
discussed included national policies, legislation and institutions; environmental
planning and management; international river basins; economics and financing
of river basin management; participatory management; capacity building and training;
information management; management of High-Andean river basins; disaster prevention;
water management; and sediment control. The Ramsar Bureau was represented by
Regional Coordinator Margarita Astrálaga,
and her brief report of the
meeting (in English) is available here, as well as her presentation
(in Spanish): La Convención
Ramsar y las Cuencas Hidrográficas. [08/07/03]
World
Wetlands Day preparations under way. World Wetlands Day takes place
on 2 February every year, and traditionally the Ramsar Bureau provides materials
for the use of everyone who will be organizing WWD activities of their own.
It’s time now to let our readers know about our preparations for World Wetlands
Day 2004 in plenty of time for their own planning. This year the Bureau has
developed a theme -- From the Mountains to the Sea
- Wetlands at Work for Us -- that will allow people to focus on their
own wetlands and consider how these wetlands work for their benefit both at
national and local levels, and to consider too how to manage their wetlands
so that they continue to deliver these benefits. Here
is a brief description of the materials now being got ready for distribution
in mid-October [français
et/y español]. It's
worth mentioning that, as last year, all of the materials being offered free
of charge for WWD activities will also be made available in Quark XPress design
format, so that those with the will and the means to do so can adapt the materials
to their own languages, their own local circumstances, and larger print-runs
if they wish (as in Trinidad-and-Tobago's T-shirt, left). Here
is a page of illustrations of WWD2003 materials that have been adapted by our
collaborators in several countries to their own specificities [français
et/y español].
(It should be noted that the Ramsar Bureau, having provided the original designs,
is unfortunately not able to provide funding for local adaptations.) [03/07/03]
Cycling
for the environment -- the river Rhône. In the framework of
the International Year of Freshwater, the group Cycl'eauRhône
is making a bicycling trip from the Rhône Glacier in Switzerland down
the length of the Rhône river past Lake Geneva to the Mediterranean. Some
20 cyclists "animés d'un esprit sportif et écologique"
are making the trip, 28 June to 6 July, in 8 stages of about 100km each, and
at the end of each stage there are local activities and displays featuring their
environmental message. Ramsar Regional Assistant for Europe, Estelle
Gironnet, joined the group at a village near the Ramsar Bureau in
Gland on Monday, 30 June, and valiantly cycled with them for 33 kilometres to
the staging post in Geneva, where the mayor of the city welcomed the riders
and introduced a reception including street theatre with a water theme. Here's
the story. [03/07/03]
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Now
available. Report of the LMNN-ER donors/partners meeting.
Lake Malawi-Niassa-Nyasa falls within the
territories of Malawi (Lake Malawi), Mozambique (Lake Niassa),
and Tanzania (Lake Nyasa). The Lake MNN Ecoregion (LMNN-ER) covers about
13,000,000 hectares and comprises the lake itself and its drainage basin, which
includes Lake Malombe lying to the south. The lake is biologically
the most valuable lake in the African Great Lakes area and could be regarded
as the most biologically important lake in the world, particularly important,
in fact, for its concentrations of endemic fish species and especially its cichlid
species. The lake probably supports more species of fish than any other lake
in the world and accommodates 14% of the world's freshwater species, 99% of
which are endemic. For this reason, among others, WWF has identified it as a
priority freshwater area under its Ecoregion Conservation Programme. On 12-13
May 2003, a donor/partner meeting was hosted by WWF's
Southern Africa Regional Programme Office (SARPO) in Mangochi on
Lake Malawi, financially supported by DGIS (The Netherlands) through the WWF
Living Waters Programme and by the Ramsar
Bureau with funds from the Government of Switzerland. The purpose
was to review the progress of the LMNN-ER Conservation Programme and agree the
best way forward, including consideration of an FAO-led draft for a trinational
convention to establish a basin commission for the sustainable development of
LMNN and its surroundings, and the full
report of the meeting is available here, with the draft treaty text
and additional presentations included in PDF format. [02/07/03]
WLI
launches new Web site. WLI - Wetland Link
International - is a global network of wetland education centres
coordinated by the Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust (WWT)
and endorsed by the Ramsar Bureau as a means of sharing ideas and
expertise about CEPA (communications, education and public awareness)
concerning wetlands. WLI is launching its first Web site on July 1st 2003. Visit
the site to find out what WLI does, what it plans to do, and how your wetland
education centre can join. There is also a planned global wetland education
centre directory with illustrated site profiles. Future plans include an e-group
and online training modules ranging from design and interpretative planning
to formal and informal education programmes, activities and events. Find out
more by visiting http://www.wli.org.uk
and this little bit of background here.
[01/07/03]
ALAS
- All About Salt. The ALAS project is a programme of work that recognised
the economic, social and cultural value of traditional salinas (salt pans) as
well as their importance as wetland habitat for breeding and migrating birds.
The central aims of the project were to encourage the rehabilitation and restoration
of salinas around the European and Mediterranean coasts, the training of young
salters to continue traditional techniques, the dissemination of information
about the value of traditional salinas and the development of marketing strategies
to sell traditionally-produced salt. Having begun in
December 1999, the ALAS project came to a highly successful close in December
2002 with the publication of "Salt and salinas as natural resources and
alternative poles for local development", a set of information leaflets,
and a 14-minute video entitled "Salt and Salinas in the Mediterranean".
Here's a brief report to the Ramsar CEPA
List on these helpful new products. [30/06/03]
CIESIN's
Ramsar Data Gateway is available. The Ramsar Bureau is pleased to
announce the availability of the Ramsar Wetlands Data
Gateway, a Web-based information service developed by the Centre
for International Earth Science Information Network (CIESIN) at Columbia
University (USA), in collaboration with the Ramsar Bureau and Wetlands International.
The Gateway was demonstrated at Ramsar COP8 in Valencia, and Resolution VIII.13
called on "the Bureau and Wetlands International to ... make arrangements
for the Ramsar Sites Database to be accessible through the World Wide Web, including
the inclusion of a regularly updated version of the Ramsar Sites Database for
incorporation into the Ramsar Wetland Data Gateway developed by the Centre for
International Earth Science Information Network (CIESIN)." Data about Ramsar
sites from the Ramsar Sites Database maintained by Wetlands International are
fully searchable using simple and advanced search tools, and an online mapping
tool places Ramsar sites in their geographic context by providing map overlays
of watershed boundaries, land cover, population density, and major water bodies.
To explore the Gateway, please visit http://sedac.ciesin.columbia.edu/ramsardg/. For more information on the Gateway, or to provide feedback, please contact Alex de Sherbinin at adesherbinin@ciesin.columbia.edu or Tel. +1-845-365-8936/Fax +1-845-365-8922. [français et/y español]
Now
available.
Pix of MedWet/Com5. The 5th meeting of the Mediterranean
Wetlands Committee (MedWet/Com5) recently took place in Izmir, Turkey,
12 to 15 June 2003, at the kind invitation of the Turkish Government. Following
on from the 4th meeting, held in Sesimbra, Portugal, in 2001, the present meeting
covered the range of achievements and new challenges and orientations of the
MedWet Initiative in the recent past and into the future. Ramsar Secretary General
Delmar Blasco (left, wearing
his going-away present during closing ceremonies) opened the
meeting on behalf of Ramsar, and the soon-to-be Secretary General Dr Peter
Bridgewater participated with the Ramsar Bureau team, along with Nick Davidson,
the Deputy Secretary General, three of our Regional Coordinators, and Carlos
Villalba, all contributing actively,
including
as chairpersons and rapporteur. The conclusions of the meeting and of the technical
session will be available on the Ramsar and MedWet Web sites soon, and in the
meantime here are some photographs
of the meetings, cultural events, and Gediz excursion. [24/06/03]
Now
available. Photos of Butrint. Following on from last week's
announcement of Albania's designation of World Heritage site Lake Butrint as
a Wetland of International Importance,
here
are four very nice photos of the site, including one of the ancient port of
Buthrotum. Extremely pretty and all blue and peaceful-looking as well. [18/06/03]
More to follow. Watch this space.
Feedback and suggestions are welcome to: the Ramsar Convention Bureau,
Rue Mauverney 28, CH-1196 Gland, Switzerland (tel +41 22 999 0170, fax +41 22
999 0169, e-mail
Updated
regularly by Dwight Peck, Ramsar Bureau.
Back
Issues of the Bulletin Board. Early in every month, the current edition
of the Bulletin Board is copied to the Ramsar
Archives page, and you can dig through the back issues there --
their contents are still indexed on the Global
Index page in perpetuity.
visitors to this site since...... Wait . . . . . . Take a number and a plastic
chair -- we'll call you when there's room at the head of the queue.